A3. Man made climate – since 1850 (p. 3-12)(in:
PDF)
a. Can people alter weather and climate?#b. Where do we stand?#c.
What should we look at? Anthropogenic ocean use!#d. Two world wars -
two climatic changes#e. Comments concerning the terms "weather" and "climate"# f. Further
remarks. # Temperature
Map TM2 (page 15)

a. Introduction#b.
Warm & warmer – The situation prior to the WWII#c. Time witnesses see
a lot, but understand little#d.
Great Britain
in rough seas#e. A power that turns the Baltic into ice#f. Three sea ice
years in succession#g. A thriller about the cold – But science is ignorant#h.
Europe
cold vs. Globe warm; 1940-1942 - A summary,
# Temperature Map TM3 (page 25)

C4. The sky cries because of the war?
Dry, Rain, Cold!
(p. 57-66) (in:
PDF)
a. Why talk about rain? An Introduction#b. Does war make rain?#c.
The factor of rain prior to winter 1939/40#d. Did the war show an effect
in the
U.S.
in autumn 1939 and January 1940?#e. Natural variation?# f. Is it possible to establish a connection with the war?#g.
The findings until now can be summarized as
follows:
# Temperature
Map TM5 (page 59)

C5
Jet stream blocked by naval combat? (p. 67-74) (in:
PDF)
a. Air flow blocked – Understood? – An introduction#b. The first days and
the cyclone in the German Bight#c. Blocking observed but not understood# d. Not competent enough to read
the wind? #e. The whole winter season affected#f. How R.
Scherhag rated December 1939#g. Ananthropogeniccontribution to the preparationof
a recordwinter.
# Temperature
Map TM6 (page 69)

C7. The evidence in the ice of the
Baltic Sea
(p. 79-90)(in: PDF)
a. An Overview – The numerous aspects to discuss# b. The icing
condition, start, intensity, and duration in a brief view#c. Assault at the
Bay
of
Gdansk
starts an extraordinary ice season#d. Loss of heat by shells and anthropogenic forcing# e. From
Kiel
to
Gdansk
the Kriegsmarine churned the sea#f. The Scandinavian in action and the
Kattegat#g. The
Skagerrak
on the edge#h. The German Bight and the sea ice# i. How the navies prevented early icing in the
Gulf of Finland#j. Randomly excluded

C8From the North Sea to the
Atlantic
(p. 91-100)(in:
PDF)a. Could early questions have
minimised the worst?#b. The naval war situation around the
UK# c. Activities
around southern
England# d.
Cooling the North Sea a matter to reckon with#e. War theater in the
North Sea#f. The west wind aisle mutates to a cold corridor # Temperature
Map TM7 (page 93)

E1.Did naval war stop Adolf Hitler before
Moscow
? (p. 123-128)(in: PDF)
a. A "lightning war"
(blitzkrieg) collapses in early December 1941#b.An overview of Naval Battlefields and weather deviation#c. Did the winter commence early?#d. Curiosity or what
happened at Malgoviks
primary school in Lappland/Sweden?#e. Early sea ice?#f. What made the winter of 1941/42 so severe?
# Temperature
Map TM9 (page 125)

(in:
PDF)
a.The
North Atlantic is not the only but the dominant factor#b. The Sea Surface Temperature issue#c.What can NAO tell? #d.A link between the
North Atlantic and
Europe
?#e.The
temperature-drop issue# f. Summery remarks

a Introduction# b. The Pacific War# c. A
cold winter in
Japan
1944/45 only due to natural variation?# d. The regional extent of the cold winter#e. Coldest May &
July on record – The data 1945#f. A clue from SST and correlation?# g. The Shift in the Pacific – mid 1940s –?#h. Interpreting the
PDO record# i.
Discussion and Summary